lsseckman | 4 years ago | on: Pyth project could open up decentralized trading and lending, supporters say
lsseckman's comments
lsseckman | 5 years ago | on: BitTorrent’s Bizarre Collapse
lsseckman | 7 years ago | on: China Steps Up Trade Secret Theft from US Companies
These are companies we all helped build in one way or another.
Their revenues boost our economy and pay for a lot of our govt services
lsseckman | 7 years ago | on: Patreon Is Suspending Adult Content Creators Because of Its Payment Partners
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Suspending Cambridge Analytica and SCL Group from Facebook
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Twitter Followers Vanish Amid Inquiries into Fake Accounts
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Something doesn’t ad up about America’s advertising market
lots of people have heard about AIM, but it didn't save AOL
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Something doesn’t ad up about America’s advertising market
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Turning brain signals into useful information
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Nasdaq Plans to Introduce Bitcoin Futures
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: AI Model Fundamentally Cracks Captchas, Scientists Say
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: The Bitcoin Apocalypse Is Coming in Mid-November
Both failed, only one was bailed out.
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Due Diligence Report on Otto and Anthony Levandowski
Does that make it feel more like he was intentionally storing company files in a personal account?
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Due Diligence Report on Otto and Anthony Levandowski
Always interesting seeing company employees not using their company's products. Shows that what some view as a monolith is a bunch of smaller bands of people.
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Ask HN: Where do you go to trade your cryptocurrencies?
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Visualising High Frequency Trading in Bitcoin (2014)
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Joining Apple, Amazon’s China Cloud Service Bows to Censors
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Net Neutrality Day of Action: Help Preserve the Open Internet
I'll contribute that this is a good way to explain to someone why corporations inherently care about their employees only to the extent of their usefulness.
lsseckman | 8 years ago | on: Lessons I Learned from the Dotcom Bubble for the Coming Cryptocurrency Bubble
lsseckman | 9 years ago | on: Why Are Economists Giving Piketty the Cold Shoulder?
This is interesting. Let's say there is a a r=g, to r is slightly less than g world. Then people would try to maximize employment & investing that income. Sortof double dipping. Am I thinking about that correctly?
Also, r<g doesn't mean that you're 'never' going to make more than the growth in output, right? Theoretically good stewards would outpace the market.